study habits questionnaire for high school students
April 18, 2026by Mindcrate Team
What are your real study habits?
Let’s be honest. Nobody is born knowing how to study. It’s a skill, and you can get better at it. But first, you have to see where you’re starting from.
This isn’t a test. There are no right or wrong answers, just honest ones. The goal is to see your own habits for what they are.
Part 1: Your Space
Where you study matters just as much as how you do it. Your brain takes cues from your environment. If you’re trying to learn in a place designed for sleeping or eating, it gets confused.
1. Do you have one dedicated study spot? Or do you just work wherever you land—your bed, the kitchen table, the floor?
2. Can you see your phone right now? Even if it's face down, it’s on your mind. A 2017 study found that just having a smartphone in the room lowers your brainpower.
3. What’s the noise level? Music? The TV in the background? People talking?
4. When do you study? Are you a night owl cramming at 1 a.m., or do you work right after school?
Look, if you're trying to write an essay on your bed with your phone buzzing and Netflix on a laptop nearby, you're not really studying. You're just making homework harder than it has to be.
This is about what you actually do when you sit down to work.
5. Do you have a plan before you start? Do you decide, "I'm going to finish my algebra and read a chapter of history"? Or do you just open a book and see what happens?
6. Do you take notes while you read? Underlining, highlighting, or summarizing in your own words forces you to pay attention. If your eyes are just moving across the page while you think about something else, you’re not learning.
7. What do you do when you hit something hard? Skip it? Ask a friend? Or do you try to wrestle with it on your own?
8. Do you look at your notes on days when you don't have a test? Spreading out your review over time is how things stick in your long-term memory. Cramming doesn't work.
9. Do you start studying for tests a few days ahead? Or is it a full-blown panic the night before?
I once tried to study for a massive physics final by rereading the textbook in one night. I remember sitting in my dad's 2011 Honda Civic at 4:17 a.m., the dome light on a page about thermodynamics that made zero sense. I failed. Don't be like me.
Part 3: Your Headspace
Your attitude can be the biggest thing holding you back.
10. Do you believe you can get smarter? Or do you think you’re stuck with the brain you have? Believing you can improve is a huge predictor of who actually does.
11. How do you react to a bad grade? Do you see it as proof ("I'm just bad at math") or as information ("I need a new way to study for the next test")?
12. Are you afraid to ask questions in class? Worrying about looking stupid is a terrible reason to stay confused.
13. Are you getting enough sleep? Your brain processes information and builds memories while you sleep. If you're always tired, you're making it do its job with one hand tied behind its back.
14. Do you have a life outside of school? Burnout is real. Hobbies, sports, and friends aren't distractions—they’re what keep your brain healthy.
There's no secret trick here. What works for someone else might not work for you. But looking at your own patterns is the only way to figure out what to change. Maybe just pick one thing from this list that feels off, and start there.
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